Exactly.We all adhere to some sort of moral creed, whether we acknowledge it. — Waya
And so is yours from my perspective. Where do we go from here?And yours is an abomination. — Banno
I can say the same thing about you, where does that leave us?You are not worth listening to on questions of morality. — Banno
Sure, you can't. But that's not the question. The question is, who decides that God choosing to destroy all Creation is immoral? How do you reach that conclusion? If God is your rightful owner, and without Him, you would not even continue to exist, based on what can you claim that He lacks the RIGHT to choose when you live and when you die? Just because this doesn't appeal to your soft sensibilities?You can't escape responsibility for your moral actions by being a moral coward. You decide to follow what you take to be god's commands, or not. — Banno
That's not being a moral relativist. I did not claim that X or Y is immoral at one time in history and not at another. I did, however, claim that stoning as punishment, or jail as punishment in the case of adultery are both just forms of punishment, and if society was structured such that these types of punishments were the norm and would not offend our sensibility, I would have no problem with it.ah, so you are a moral relativist, — Benkei
Yes, and so too would Ancient Jew Sappy believe that, even if, counterfactually, he grew up in an environment in which, as a result of cultural conditioning, he believed that not stoning a vicious criminal was acceptable, it doesn't follow that it is acceptable, or that that is any good reason to doubt that it's acceptable. (and as for why these things are acceptable, he really shouldn't have to explain that to you)Your reasoning is clearly erroneous. Even if, counterfactually, I grew up in an environment in which, as a result of cultural conditioning, I believed that stoning or slavery or genocide or torture or what-have-you was acceptable, it doesn't follow that it is acceptable, or that that is any good reason to doubt that it's not acceptable. (And as for why these things are not acceptable, I really shouldn't have to explain that to you). — Sapientia
Adultery is also quite natural. You're inconsistent. — frank
That's not being a moral relativist. I did not claim that X or Y is immoral at one time in history and not at another. I did, however, claim that stoning as punishment, or jail as punishment in the case of adultery are both just forms of punishment, and if society was structured such that these types of punishments were the norm and would not offend our sensibility, I would have no problem with it. — Agustino
You can't escape responsibility for your moral actions by being a moral coward. You decide to follow what you take to be god's commands, or not.
— Banno
Sure, you can't. But that's not the question. The question is, who decides that God choosing to destroy all Creation is immoral? — Agustino
stoning adulterers immoral
— Benkei
There is nothing immoral about stoning adulterers if such is the law and everyone knows that the law is such. — Agustino
If you think there are a range of appropriate (or just) punishments, does that make you a moral relativist? — Agustino
I wouldn't personally advocate for such laws because I'm not used to living in such a society (and I personally find it barbaric), but I can certainly imagine living back in the day and accepting such laws as part of the way the world is. — Agustino
Sure, I agree. — Agustino
There is nothing immoral about stoning adulterers if such is the law and everyone knows that the law is such. — Agustino
Does it matter in a court of law if she was a mother, a prostitute, or a barbarian? — Waya
It would be a bad judge to let a criminal go, UNLESS someone offered to pay the price AND the person accepted it. — Waya
That's not being a moral relativist. I did not claim that X or Y is immoral at one time in history and not at another. — Agustino
Because they would interpret our way of living as effeminate, weak - they being used to cutting heads off, public beatings, etc. would have found our modern world a world for weak men and women, who cannot bear anything more. — Agustino
Yes, and so too would Ancient Jew Sappy believe that, even if, counterfactually, he grew up in an environment in which, as a result of cultural conditioning, he believed that not stoning a vicious criminal was acceptable, it doesn't follow that it is acceptable, or that that is any good reason to doubt that it's acceptable. (and as for why these things are acceptable, he really shouldn't have to explain that to you) — Agustino
Why is your decision better than mine?We each must decide. And making that choice is exactly the question. — Banno
No, that's not what I said. Check below:Should it occur today, it's immoral, yesterday moral. — Hanover
If you think there are a range of appropriate (or just) punishments, does that make you a moral relativist? — Agustino
I don't claim stoning would be immoral today. It wouldn't. It would just offend our sensibilities, but it would not be immoral. There is no moral relativism there at all. You and Benkei are both misreading what I've written.I did, however, claim that stoning as punishment, or jail as punishment in the case of adultery are both just forms of punishment, and if society was structured such that these types of punishments were the norm and would not offend our sensibility, I would have no problem with it. — Agustino
Yes, adultery is absolutely wrong, but not because God said so.You think adultery is absolutely wrong because God said so — Hanover
Only due to technology, not because the ancient society wasn't more manly. They clearly were.Should an ancient society exist alongside a modern one, the manly men ancients wouldn't scoff at the girly moderns, but would live in constant fear and dependence on them. The good old days weren't. — Hanover
So people 2000 years ago didn't have sound moral judgement? Only we have sound moral judgement, because our time is privileged over all other historical times. Don't you see how arrogant and ridiculous this is? Every historical era sees itself as the standard to compare everyone else to - I don't see any reason to prioritise today over yesterday - quite the contrary, we should do the very opposite, because very likely we have many blindspots that make us ignore the faults of the present (just like the Ancients ignored the faults of their present).as anyone with sound moral judgement would acknowledge — Sapientia
So people 2000 years ago didn't have sound moral judgement? — Agustino
I don't claim stoning would be immoral today. It wouldn't. It would just offend our sensibilities, but it would not be immoral. There is no moral relativism there at all. You and Benkei are both misreading what I've written. — Agustino
Human Rights are the exact inverse of the Christian Decalogue — Agustino
So people 2000 years ago didn't have sound moral judgement? — Agustino
Oh how quaint. I thought the same about you. — Agustino
If you require proof that stoning adulterers is moral, then that's your moral failing since you're too weak to do justice. — Agustino
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